The Arizona Interscholastic Association has fired a basketball official who reportedly made a racist remark prior to a freshman game played Tuesday night at Walden Grove High School (Sahuarita, Ariz.).

An AIA spokesman said the official, who it would not name, asked visiting Pueblo High School’s coach if his players had their green cards. The comment came just before tipoff, as the coaches and officials were getting together on the court for introductions.

TUSD director of interscholastics Herman House reported the comment Wednesday morning, the and the official was fired soon after. A Facebook post that went viral overnight praised Pueblo’s players for playing with class after the remark was made. The woman who wrote the post, Patricia Coleman, is the mother of one of Pueblo’s players. She told the Star that “most of the boys had never witnessed or been involved in this type of racism.

“Breaks my heart that they had to be a part of this ugliness,” she said.

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Pueblo High School is located on South 12th Avenue in a largely Hispanic part of Tucson; 89 percent of the students who attend the school are Hispanic, according to the most recent data from US News & World Report.

The AIA’s state commissioner of officials, Brian Gessner, characterized the remark as an “insensitive comment.” The official reportedly told the AIA that his remarks were an attempt at humor and directed toward the Warriors’ coach.

The reported statement violates the AIA officials’ code of ethics, which states that referees and other officials must:

Constantly uphold the honor and dignity of the avocation in all personal conduct and relations with the student athletes, coaches, athletic directors, school administrators, colleagues, and the public and to be a worthy example to the athletes under one’s jurisdiction.

Carry a responsibility to act in a manner becoming to a professional person. The conduct of any official influences the attitudes of the public toward the profession in general as well as toward the official in particular.

Pueblo athletic director Brandon Sanders was out of town when the incident occurred, but said Wednesday that the school will begin its own investigation as soon as possible.